RICHMOND, Va. (UPI) -- A national survey of 2,765 men and women shows
Americans are more sexually active than they were in 1990 despite the
specter of AIDS, two former University of Virginia researchers say.

``Most Americans regard sex as part of the Bill of Rights,'' said Dr.
Samuel Janus, who with his wife, Dr. Cynthia Janus, wrote ``The Janus
Report on Sexual Behavior.''

Their report is being touted as the most comprehensive study on
American sexual behavior since the Kinsey report four decades ago.

More than four out of every five respondents in the survey said they
were gravely concerned about sexually transmitted disease, but nearly
three of every four men and more than two out of every three women
reported maintaining or increasing their sexual activity.

``Most Americans seem to feel AIDS is a problem for gays and the
poor, and that they're immune,'' he said.

Evidence demonstrating heavy sexual activity among people older than
65 is one of the survey's more important findings, Janus believes.

``People over 65 are not only able but eager to have sex,'' he told
the Richmond Times-Dispatch in a phone interview from Boston, where he's
starting a national book tour.

Janus said 14 percent of men over 65 reported having sex daily. Only
1 percent of women over 65 reported having daily sex, but he said that's
probably because many are widows.

``A real life force continues on in maturity and keeps people alive,''
he said.

The survey, which included 125 in-depth interviews, also found:

17 percent of the female respondents and 22 percent of the males
reported at least one homosexual encounter.

23 percent of women and 11 percent of the men reported having been
sexually molested as children.

45 percent of single women and 38 percent of single men would like
to become parents even if they don't marry.

11 percent of the women and 14 percent of the men had some personal
experience with sadomasochism.

The South has the youngest ages of sexual initiation and the most
reported premarital sex.

Cynthia Janus was an associate professor of radiology and of
obstetrics and gynecology from 1988 to 1991 at U.Va. Samuel Janus, a
psychologist, was a part-time faculty member serving as a clinical
associate professor of behavioral medicine from 1988 to 1992.

Their book sprang from nine years of research, they said, though none
was conducted at U.Va. The couple now lives in Vineland, N.J.